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Monday January 27 9:50 AM EST
UAE Launches Service To Censor Internet
DUBAI - The United Arab Emirates's monopoly Internet provider launched
a service Saturday to censor sites in cyberspace that breached local
moral values and traditions.
Officials from state telecommunications company Etisalat said the new
Proxy Service would be compulsory for the UAE's 9,669 subscribers, who
will have to configure their web browsers that navigate the net by
February 2.
"The service was launched today as part of our efforts to improve the
Internet service to our subscribers after lengthy study and research,"
said one official at Etisalat.
"We were working on it before some official statements were made on
the need to control access to some sites on the service," he told
Reuters.
The move follows repeated calls to regulate access to the Internet in
the conservative Gulf region, where most women are veiled, magazine
pictures revealing cleavage or bare legs are blacked out and
questioning the existence of god can be punishable by death.
Some are worried about the spread of pornography as well as religious
and political material through the worldwide network of interlinked
computers.
Last year, Dubai Police chief Major General Dhahi Khalfan Tamim
created a rare public row in the UAE saying the information ministry
and the police, rather that Etisalat, should be authorized to issue
Internet licenses as it was their job to monitor data coming into the
UAE and maintain security.
Telecommunications experts say the Proxy Service will not be "fully
water-tight," but would help block access to known and unwanted sites
-- a list of which could be constantly updated.
The proxy server will be pre-fed with Internet addresses where access
is blocked off, industry sources said. But the server will be unable
to block access if addresses of prohibited sites are changed, as
frequently happens.
Etisalat says it will disconnect any customer who abused its Internet
services and violated "order and clear laws."
"Singapore has succeeded to a great extent in its drive to control
harm done by the Internet," said another Etisalat official. "Why
cannot we?"
Singapore government measures to regulate political and religious
content on the Internet and keep it free of pornography became
effective in July last year. They require all Internet service
operators and local content providers to be registered with the
Singapore Broadcasting Authority.
Copyright, Reuters Ltd. All rights reserved
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